The Ringer Staff’s 2018 NFL Midseason Playoff and Awards Predictions

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https://www.theringer.com/nfl/2018/...wards-predictions-todd-gurley-patrick-mahomes

The Ringer Staff’s 2018 NFL Midseason Playoff and Awards Predictions
Patrick Mahomes II may be a near lock for MVP, but the postseason landscape is much less predictable than it’s appeared through eight weeks
By The Ringer Staff

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Getty Images/Ringer illustration

We’re now officially eight weeks into the NFL season, and we know considerably more about the league than when we tried this exercise in the preseason. The Chiefs and Rams have separated themselves in their respective conferences, rookies have begun making real impacts for their teams, and a few players have returned from injury to shock the league. So with a half-season of knowledge under our belts, here are The Ringer staff’s midseason NFL playoff and awards predictions.

Playoff Predictions and Super Bowl Winner

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Robert Mays: I picked Rams to win the Super Bowl before the season, and I’m sticking with my choice. Sean McVay’s team has given no indication that it isn’t the best group in the NFL. Sure, the defense has struggled at times, but with Aaron Donald and that offense, the team as a whole is more than capable of overcoming some secondary concerns.

It’s tough not to throw the Chiefs in here, but their defense still has a ton of holes. Kansas City has its own defensive game-wrecker in Dee Ford, but even after their relatively slow start, I think the Chargers have enough to give K.C. a run in the AFC.

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Kevin Clark: There are four teams that are currently better than everyone else in the sport: the Rams, Chiefs, Saints, and Patriots. I’m picking the Saints and Pats for a handful of reasons. The almost ludicrous efficiency of Drew Brees and a defense that’s rounding into shape have me feeling good about New Orleans.

As for the Patriots, they look like … the Patriots. It has been eight seasons since the Pats didn’t reach at least the AFC title game, and they’ve made the Super Bowl in three of the last four years. As long as they are still part of the NFL’s elite—and they are—you have to pick them. Going to the Super Bowl is sort of what they do.

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Danny Kelly: These might be the chalk picks at this point, but I don’t care. The Rams offense is a juggernaut; Jared Goff’s playing incredibly efficient ball, Todd Gurley is a threat to score from anywhere on the field, and the team’s deep and versatile pass-catching corps is impossible to match up with downfield.

The Chiefs, meanwhile, have the inside track to the no. 1 seed in the AFC and that coveted home-field advantage throughout the playoffs—if and when they secure that, it’s tough to see anyone going into Arrowhead and outscoring Patrick Mahomes II and the team’s multipronged offense. The defense has been playing a little better lately, too. This would be a dream Super Bowl matchup too, so I’m going to do my part to speak (or write) it into existence.

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Rodger Sherman: Somehow, the Patriots beating the Chiefs on Sunday Night Football a few weeks back convinced me the Chiefs were going to win the Super Bowl.

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Riley McAtee: I picked Rams over Patriots in the preseason, and after eight weeks, I see no reason to deviate from that. L.A. is the best team in football, and I’ll still take Bill Belichick in the playoffs over Andy Reid. The only one of my picks that may turn some heads is the Colts winning the AFC South.

Though they’re just 3-5 and sitting last in the division right now, Indy is getting healthier by the day and that division is still wide open. With a cupcake schedule the rest of the way and a rejuvenated Andrew Luck, the Colts could sneak into the postseason.

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Danny Heifetz: I am sticking with my preseason pick. The Chargers went 5-2 without their best defender, Joey Bosa, and their only losses came against the Rams and Chiefs. Their offense can go toe to toe with Kansas City, New England, and Pittsburgh, and their defense has gotten significantly better. Yet the Saints will ultimately prevail because they have the best roster in football.

MVP

Patrick Mahomes II, Chiefs
Mays:
I want to put Todd Gurley’s name here so bad—just because I’m so damn tired of the conversation around this award. But I can’t do it. As long as the current NFL awards structure is in place and the modern game operates the way that it does, it’s going to take an incredibly wonky season for the MVP to be anyone other than a quarterback. That’s why I’m picking Mahomes.

Even if the Rams rattle off a 15-1 season and Jared Goff continues to put up huge numbers, he and Gurley are going to split the vote. Mahomes is on pace for more than 50 touchdown passes for a team that’s cruising toward a first-round bye. He deserves it.

Patrick Mahomes
Clark:
Mahomes’s numbers, his style of play, and his team’s success will eventually be too hard for voters to overlook. I think he runs away with this.

Patrick Mahomes
Kelly:
The combination of Mahomes’s arm strength, accuracy, mobility, and smarts makes the Chiefs offense impossible to defend. The second-year pro has been nearly flawless in Reid’s hybrid spread/West Coast scheme, and even when the designed play breaks down he’s capable of moving around and picking up yards with his legs; there’s just no way to game plan to stop Mahomes. Oh, and though this isn’t part of the voting considerations, his $3.7 million cap hit this year makes him the most valuable player in the league from a salary cap standpoint, too.

Patrick Mahomes
Sherman:
I told you he was good.

Patrick Mahomes
McAtee:
As much fun as it is to speculate about guys like Gurley or Khalil Mack winning MVP, the award usually goes to the best quarterback on a great team who throws a lot of touchdowns. Mahomes has been the story of the season so far.

Aaron Rodgers, Packers
Heifetz:
I appreciate the argument for Gurley (and Goff) but their production speaks more to McVay’s candidacy for coach of the year than the MVP award. Ditto to Mahomes and Reid in Kansas City. Rodgers is succeeding despite his coach, and that will become clear by the end of the season when he single-leggedly drags the Packers into the playoffs.

Offensive Player of the Year

Todd Gurley, Rams
Mays:
The guy is on pace for more than 2,300 total yards and 30 touchdowns. He’s a running back setting records in an era where running backs have been banished to the kids’ table. I know the Rams offense is perfectly set up to let Gurley thrive, but as I’ve written before, I also think he’s the perfect player to make that system go. He’s special, no matter how cushy his surroundings might be.

Todd Gurley
Clark:
For some reason voters have decided that this award can go to running backs while the MVP goes to quarterbacks—Gurley and DeMarco Murray have won two of the last four Offensive POY awards. Gurley will get this as a nod to his role in one of the league’s best offenses.

Todd Gurley
Kelly:
Gurley’s on pace for 30 touchdowns this year, which will bring him close to the NFL’s single-season record (31). He’s ridiculous.

Patrick Mahomes, Chiefs
Sherman:
This is like the seventh time I’ve been asked to do NFL awards predictions and still nobody has told me the difference between MVP and Offensive Player of the Year.

Todd Gurley
McAtee:
No player has won this award in back-to-back years since another Rams running back: Marshall Faulk in 1999, 2000, and 2001. But Gurley is once again lapping the field. He leads the league in yards from scrimmage and touchdowns and should easily take this trophy home again.

Todd Gurley
Heifetz:
If Gurley comes anywhere close to staying on his scoring pace, he deserves this award. Though Mahomes is certainly on his heels if he doesn’t win MVP.

Defensive Player of the Year

Aaron Donald, Rams
Mays:
There’s just no arguing with the impact Donald has had so far this season. He currently has 10 sacks, which would be an incredible season number for a defensive tackle. No interior defensive linemen has ever put up 20 in a single year, and at this rate, I’m not betting against Donald pulling that off.

Aaron Donald
Clark:
Donald’s sack number is only going to grow as the season progresses. He can wreck games and will be in a handful of marquee matchups down the stretch, which will allow him to impress voters.

Aaron Donald
Kelly:
It’s safe to say money hasn’t changed Donald much. The newly inked $135 million defensive tackle is still the most unblockable defensive player in the NFL: Through eight weeks, he’s first in pressures (54), sacks (10), and hurries (37).

Khalil Mack, Bears
Sherman:
Not many defensive players can single-handedly shift games in their team’s favor. Mack has done it like three times over the first half of the year.

J.J. Watt, Texans
McAtee:
This race feels wide open to me. Donald leads the league in sacks, 14 different players are tied for second in interceptions, a rookie (Darius Leonard) has the most tackles in the league, Donald has the most tackles for a loss, and Fletcher Cox and Donald are tied for the most QB hits. So I’ll take Watt, who quietly has 8.0 sacks and four forced fumbles. Everyone loves a good comeback story.

Aaron Donald
Heifetz:
Unless he gets hurt, the answer is Donald. Voting for someone other than Donald is admitting to being bored with his greatness, like when Derrick Rose won MVP over LeBron James in 2011.

Coach of the Year

Matt Nagy, Bears
Mays:
If I’m picking the guy that deserves it the most (and didn’t win it last year), it’s Reid. But this award often goes to a coach whose team didn’t make the playoffs in the previous season and vastly outperforms expectations. The Bears are 4-3, but they’ve got a favorable schedule down the stretch that still includes games against the Bills, two games against a Lions team that just traded Golden Taint, and a trip to meet the 49ers. A 10-6 finish and a wild-card berth is still on the table for Chicago, and that’s possible in large part because of how Nagy has fashioned this offense.

Andy Reid, Chiefs
Clark:
There may still be a big push for a coach who overachieves with an average roster—someone like Jay Gruden in Washington or Nagy. But barring 12 wins from one of those guys, I think the award goes to Reid, who has created one of the most efficient offenses in NFL history with a first-time starter.

Andy Reid
Kelly:
The Chiefs’ beautiful, unstoppable offense was designed by Reid, is run by the quarterback Reid hand-picked, and was made possible because the transition from last year’s starter, Alex Smith, to Mahomes has been more than seamless. Reid is always going to battle his playoff-failure demons, but he deserves credit for what he’s built in Kansas City.

Andy Reid
Sherman:
Is Mahomes a better quarterback than Andy Reid is a coach? I don’t know—let’s just give them both trophies.

Sean McVay, Rams
McAtee:
The Rams will finish the year as the best team in football, and McVay deserves more credit than any head coach in the league. Outside of a late-season collapse from his team, I have a hard time envisioning anyone else winning this award.

McVay … and Reid?
Heifetz:
McVay will win, but Reid deserves the award (or they should just share it like that MVP between Peyton Manning and Steve McNair in 2003).

Comeback Player of the Year

Andrew Luck, Colts
Mays:
This an absolutely loaded category. J.J. Watt would be an excellent pick. Deshaun Watson has the Texans in first place. There are plenty of others. But I’m going with Luck. At one point, he was the future face of the league, and as recently as this spring, there were questions of whether he’d ever play again. He’s currently on pace for 4,374 yards and 46 touchdowns with a career-high 65.8 percent completion rate. I know he’s not launching rockets downfield anymore and the yards-per-attempt mark is lacking, but Luck is back, and that’s enough for me.

J.J. Watt, Texans
Clark:
Watt has eight sacks for a potential playoff team, and barring injury he will run away with this award.

J.J. Watt
Kelly:
Watt’s not quite back to the level of dominance we saw earlier in his career, but he’s posting top-tier stats again anyway, with four forced fumbles, 10 tackles for a loss, and 13 quarterback hits. Those numbers make him a front runner for his fourth Defensive Player of the Year award.

J.J. Watt
Sherman:
He’s actually playing—and well!

Andrew Luck
McAtee:
I predicted that the Colts would win the AFC South, which ties into my prediction for Luck to win Comeback Player of the Year. After a season spent on the sideline recovering from a shoulder injury, Luck has been slinging the football like no one else to begin this season. If Indianapolis can claw back into the playoff race, it’ll be because of Luck’s return to prominence.

J.J. Watt
Heifetz:
The best defensive player of his generation played in 80 of 80 games to start his career and then played in 16 of the next possible 40. Now he’s back and near the league lead in sacks. As long as he stays close to that mark, the award is his.

Offensive Rookie of the Year

Saquon Barkley, Giants
Mays:
He’s already one of the most thrilling players in the league, and he’s playing in one of the worst situations for a running back. This one’s easy.

Saquon Barkley
Clark:
Barkley already has more than 1,000 yards from scrimmage. I do not think drafting him was smart. I do not think running backs have all that much to do with building a good football team. But I do know that from a pure performance standpoint, he’s doing better than anyone in his class.

Saquon Barkley
Kelly:
Barkley is second among all rookies in rushing yards (519), first in rushing touchdowns (five), first in catches (58) and receiving yards (497)—which includes rookie receivers, by the way—and tied for first in all-purpose touchdowns (seven). He’s been as good as advertised.

Baker Mayfield, Browns
Sherman:
We could’ve ended the race after his first game.

Saquon Barkley
McAtee:
I still think any of the rookie quarterbacks could come in hot and steal this award, but so far they’ve been bad (Josh Rosen), injured and bad (Josh Allen), or wildly inconsistent (Baker Mayfield and Sam Darnold). Meanwhile, Barkley is already one of the best running backs in football.

Kerryon Johnson, Lions
Heifetz:
None of the rookie quarterbacks are making a strong case, and that may give Johnson the win by default. (Or maybe I’m just a Giants fan who’s trying to reverse jinx Saquon into winning.)

Defensive Rookie of the Year

Derwin James, Chargers
Mays:
Denzel Ward has a great case for this as well, but he’s playing for a team that likely won’t win many games the rest of the way. I’m going with James for the sheer breadth of the impact he’s had for the Chargers. He’s made his mark in coverage, against the run, and rushing the passer. There aren’t many defensive players in football that can do everything the Chargers have asked of him—let alone rookies.

Derwin James
Clark:
Bradley Chubb or Marcus Davenport could, in theory, steal this if they rack up enough sacks, but James will get this because he’s one of the best players on a Chargers team that could become one of the best teams in football. Pro Football Focus has him as the fifth-best safety in football. He is exactly what everyone who watched him at Florida State thought he would be. The Chargers are one of the hottest teams in the sport right now and so long as that doesn’t end, James will be a national star by December.

Derwin James
Kelly:
I wrote the same thing before the season that I’m going to write now: This award rewards the sexy stats—whether that’s sacks or interceptions—and James gets both. The rookie safety has already racked up 3.5 sacks and one pick, plus six passes defended, four tackles for a loss, and six quarterback hits. He’s everywhere on the field.

Denzel Ward, Browns
Sherman:
The Browns are going to be good, if they ever hire a good coach. (They may not ever hire a good coach.)

Denzel Ward
McAtee:
With three interceptions and two fumbles recovered, Ward is tied for the league lead in individual takeaways. Chubb has a quiet seven sacks in Denver and James has been a wrecking ball for the Chargers, but Ward has helped Cleveland’s defense break expectations. He has the edge.

Derwin James
Heifetz:
James has been one of the best blitzing defensive backs in football and would probably win this award if the season ended today. When Bosa returns and the Chargers pass rush gets going, James will likely add a few interceptions to his highlight reel to seal the deal. He’s a true difference-maker on a defense about to take it up a notch.
 

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Just wanted to chime in how impressive the rookie class of defensive players have been this year. I’m not surprised though...I liked a lot of them coming out. But it’s one of the better classes I’ve seen.
 

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If your going to chime in and say Anybody but Donald deserves the Defensive MVP so far this season you need to just stop watching football.


Gurley won’t get league MVP idc if he does break LT’s records. The dumb ass voters are stuck on only QB’s them pos’s!
 
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RhodyRams

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crap it's saying he is unblockable 2 vs 1!
I have slo moed a few of his pass rushes and pointed out to a friend of mine, and also a Rams fans, how AD99 uses his hands so well, and often uses leverage off one blocker to change directions and blow past the other guy trying to block him
 

dang

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Awards are a little overrated and extremely biased. It doesn’t matter if Donald is awarded defensive player of the year or MVP Because without a doubt he is the most dominant defensive player in his the NFL right now. And it’s not even close.
 

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I have slo moed a few of his pass rushes and pointed out to a friend of mine, and also a Rams fans, how AD99 uses his hands so well, and often uses leverage off one blocker to change directions and blow past the other guy trying to block him

In the 1st quarter with the score 0 - 0 Rodgers hit (I think) Davante Adams for a 40+ yard pass play.

On that play, Donald took a hands to the face or Rodgers would have been sacked on that play. This play happened with a ref standing right there and no flag.
 

Legatron4

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In the 1st quarter with the score 0 - 0 Rodgers hit (I think) Davante Adams for a 40+ yard pass play.

On that play, Donald took a hands to the face or Rodgers would have been sacked on that play. This play happened with a ref standing right there and no flag.
There were a few things that pissed me off about that play. Joyner should have been over the top of Adams way sooner. He was the only deep route on that play.
 

tempests

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Aside from being a DPOY candidate, Donald may be the first Ram to bring home the Deacon Jones trophy.

I could see Donald being double teamed that much if no one was taking attention away from him, but he is playing on the line with Suh and Brockers and putting up the best numbers of his career. I would question that 70% figure.
 

Mackeyser

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I wouldn’t. He splits doubles so fast, you’d think he was a bad blackjack player...
 

tempests

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I wouldn’t. He splits doubles so fast, you’d think he was a bad blackjack player...

I'm questioning it because of Suh's presence on the field. Teams weren't supposed to focus on Donald that much with him there.
 

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https://www.profootballfocus.com/news/pro-nfl-2018-mid-season-all-pro-team

NFL 2018 Midseason All-Pro Team
BY MICHAEL RENNER

We are eight weeks into the 2018 season, which means it’s time for some midseason awards. Let’s get right to it with PFF’s All-Pro team at the halfway point of the 2018 NFL season.

QB – DREW BREES, NEW ORLEANS SAINTS – 92.1 OVERALL GRADE

Honorable mention: Patrick Mahomes, Kansas City Chiefs

The Saints QB is simply not missing throws. On his 254 dropbacks, he’s been downgraded only 23 times. One can see how much of an outlier that is when compared to other MVP candidates like Patrick Mahomes (33) and Jared Goff (38). Unsurprisingly, his 84.8 adjusted completion percentage would be far and away a PFF single-season record.

RB – KAREEM HUNT, KANSAS CITY CHIEFS – 79.6 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Melvin Gordon, Los Angeles Chargers

Hunt had a bit of a slow start, but over the past handful of weeks, no one has been close to the Chiefs back. His 33 broken tackles on 134 carries are the most in the NFL, and his 88.2 elusive rating ranks second to Steelers running back James Conner.

WR – ADAM THIELEN, MINNESOTA VIKINGS – 91.2 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Julio Jones, Atlanta Falcons

Thielen’s consistency is reaching rarified air at this point. Six of his eight games so far have received grades of 80.0 or higher with two eclipsing 90.0. His 95 targets are eight more than any other receiver in the NFL, and even at such a high rate, Kirk Cousins has a passer rating of 123.9 when throwing Thielen’s way.

WR – DEANDRE HOPKINS, HOUSTON TEXANS – 90.3 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Michael Thomas, New Orleans Saints

Not only does Hopkins belong here statistically, but his highlight reel is also at an All-Pro level this season. He’s made 14 contested catches – the most in the NFL – on only 23 attempts, and his one-handed grab against Miami (that, unfortunately, didn’t count) was easily the catch of the season.

TE – GEORGE KITTLE, SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS – 84.2 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Travis Kelce, Kansas City Chiefs

There has been no more complete tight end in the NFL this season than Kittle. Travis Kelce and Zach Ertz may have more yards, but neither hold a candle to Kittle as a blocker. The 49ers tight end is ranked fourth at the position in receiving and run blocking.

FLEX – TYREEK HILL, KANSAS CITY CHIEFS – 85.7 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Odell Beckham Jr., New York Giants

There’s no more dangerous deep threat in the NFL today, and it’s not up for debate. Hill’s 309 deep receiving yards are the second-most in the league, and he’d be on top if not for an end zone drop against the Bengals.

LT – DAVID BAKHTIARI, GREEN BAY PACKERS – 89.5 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Terron Armstead, New Orleans Saints

Bakhtiari is the preeminent pass-protecting tackle in the NFL today. His 94.3 pass-block grade is far and away tops in the league. On 349 snaps in pass-pro, Bakhtiari has allowed only one sack, one hit and seven hurries.

LG – RODGER SAFFOLD, LOS ANGELES RAMS – 79.2 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Will Hernandez, New York Giants

Listed at 6-5, 323 pounds, Saffold has always been a people mover, and that’s no different this season. He’s earned the top run-block grade among all guards. No guard in the NFL has more positively graded blocks than Saffolrd’s 38.

C – JASON KELCE, PHILADELPHIA EAGLES – 81.0 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Matt Paradis, Denver Broncos

Yet another All-Pro nod for Kelce, who is still at the top of his game. Once a player known as a liability in pass protection, Kelce has allowed only five pressures all season long and has the third-highest pass-block grade at the position.

RG – AUSTIN BLYTHE, LOS ANGELES RAMS – 80.3 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Shaq Mason, New England Patriots

The Rams’ offensive line somehow has gotten better from a season ago, and this man is the biggest catalyst behind that. The third-year guard that the Rams got for nothing after he was waived by the Colts last year has been a revelation. His 72.9 run-block grade ranks fifth among all guards while his 84.5 pass-blocking grade is eighth.

RT RYAN RAMCZYK, NEW ORLEANS SAINTS – 86.5 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Rob Havenstein, Los Angeles Rams

Other right tackles have higher grades in pass protection, but Ramczyk’s 83.3 run-block grade – the second-highest among all tackles – gives him the edge. Oh, and he’s also only allowed four pressures all season long in pass protection.

EDGE – DEE FORD, KANSAS CITY CHIEFS – 90.5 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: J.J. Watt, Houston Texans

We’ve no clue what lightswitch flipped inside Dee Ford, but we’re not complaining about it. Ford’s speed rush has been a terror for right tackles this season, as he’s racked up 19 combined sacks and hits in the process – the most in the NFL.

EDGE – BRANDON GRAHAM, PHILADELPHIA EAGLES – 88.9 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Cameron Jordan, New Orleans Saints

The sack total may not be where it was a season ago, but that’s been Graham’s MO his entire career. The Eagles defensive end is the best bull-rusher in the NFL and, as such, effects far more throws than raw sack totals would suggest. His 12.0 pass-rush productivity is ninth among edge defenders while his 14.3 run-stop percentage ranks sixth.

DI – AARON DONALD, LOS ANGELES RAMS – 95.6 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Akiem Hicks, Chicago Bears

Watch Donald for more than a few plays, and it’s painfully obvious that he’s in a level all on his own. He not only leads the league in sacks with 10 but also in total pressures with 54. To do that from exclusively between the tackles is something we’ve never seen before.

DI – FLETCHER COX, PHILADELPHIA EAGLES – 92.4 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Kenny Clark, Green Bay Packers

Some guys get $100 million deals and mail it in, while others get $100 million deals and take their play to the next level. Cox falls in the latter. The Eagles defensive tackle has taken over the throne from Geno Atkins as the best bull-rusher interior defender in the league. It’s a big part of the reason why he leads all defenders with 14 QB hits on the year.

LB – BOBBY WAGNER, SEATTLE SEAHAWKS – 88.1 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Leighton Vander Esch, Dallas Cowboys

Wagner’s tackling ability has reached all-time great status at this point. He hasn’t missed a single one on 42 attempts this season. If we keep going back over the past year and a half, Wagner has missed all of three tackles on his last 192 attempts. And all three of those came after he returned from an injury late last season.

LB – LUKE KUECHLY, CAROLINA PANTHERS – 86.1 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Zach Brown, Washington Redskins

It hasn’t been a banner year for Kuechly so far, but even Kuechly’s ‘meh’ is still better than anyone else in the league. His 14 coverage stops are the second-most of any linebacker in the league, and he’s only allowed 10 first downs on 28 targets this season.

CB – BYRON JONES, DALLAS COWBOYS – 90.1 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Patrick Peterson, Arizona Cardinals

Jones’ transition to cornerback has gone far smoother than anyone outside of maybe Jones himself could have imagined. Through seven games, he’s allowing under two catches and only 20 yards per game. He’s also yet to allow a touchdown. Those numbers are out of this world.

CB – CHRIS HARRIS JR., DENVER BRONCOS – 85.9 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Desmond King III, Los Angeles Chargers

Harris continues to play at a high level even if the pieces around him have dwindled in recent years. His 12 coverage stops are the second-most of any corner in the league, and he’s missed only three tackles in coverage on 30 attempts. Harris’ .47 yards per coverage snap from the slot also lead the league.

S – D.J. SWEARINGER, WASHINGTON REDKSINS – 90.9 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Bradley McDougald, Seattle Seahawks

There isn’t much Swearinger hasn’t done at a high level this season. His four picks are the most of any safety in the league while his seven coverage stops rank sixth at the position. Swearinger is also the fourth highest-graded safety in run defense at 78.4.

S – JESSIE BATES, CINCINNATI BENGALS – 83.8 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: John Johnson III, Los Angeles Rams

Bates hasn’t looked anything like a rookie through the first half of the season in Cincinnati. The Bengals safety has allowed all of 59 yards into his coverage on 16 targets so far this year and has three picks to boot.

FLEX – KAREEM JACKSON, HOUSTON TEXANS – 87.0 OVERALL GRADE

HONORABLE MENTION: Derwin James, Los Angeles Chargers

Jackson has been the definition of a flex player through the Texans first eight games. He’s taken 225 snaps as a boundary corner, 114 as a slot corner, 129 as a deep safety and 75 as a box safety/linebacker. And it all depends on where they need him that game, as just two weeks ago he took 64 of his 68 snaps at only right corner.

KICKER – JOSH LAMBO, JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS – 83.3 OVERALL GRADE

Lambo has attempted 12 field goals and 12 extra points this season, connecting on all 24 of his kicks. Good from distance, he is tied for second in the league with three field goals of 50-plus yards, including a 57-yarder at Wembley Stadium this past Sunday.

Honorable Mention: Brett Maher, Dallas Cowboys

PUNTER – MICHAEL PALARDY, CAROLINA PANTHERS – 81.2 OVERALL GRADE

Palardy has been fantastic for the Panthers this season, with 18 of his 28 punts landing inside the opposing 20-yard line. He is the only punter through the first eight weeks of the season to produce a PFF grade of 80.0 or above and has routinely showcased his ability to pin returners close to the sideline to limit return opportunities.

Honorable Mention: Sam Koch, Baltimore Ravens

SPECIAL TEAMER – CORY LITTLETON, LOS ANGELES RAMS – 91.4 OVERALL GRADE

Littleton has only played 57 snaps so far this season, but he has made a huge impact on special teams, with two blocked punts through the first eight weeks of the season, making the type of impact plays that have helped the Rams navigate the first half of the season undefeated.

Honorable Mention: Sean Chandler, New York Giants

RETURNER – ANDRE ROBERTS, NEW YORK JETS – 80.6 OVERALL GRADE

Roberts has averaged 18.1 yards per punt return, the highest average among players to return at least 10 punts this season. He has found the end zone once, accumulated 399 kick-return yards and produced a long of 78 and 53 yards on punt returns and kick returns, respectively.

Honorable Mention: Tyreek Hill, Kansas City Chiefs
 

96GS#007

Pro Bowler
Joined
Oct 1, 2011
Messages
1,367
Pretty sure Mahomes is just a System QB that can run around....

MVP my ass :wtf:
 

LesBaker

Mr. Savant
Joined
Aug 23, 2012
Messages
17,460
Name
Les
This is basically saying he’s quite literally unblockable 1v1. What an absolute stud.

crap it's saying he is unblockable 2 vs 1!

I'm not sure there has even been a player on any OL ever that could handle Donald 1 on 1.

Too strong, too fast, and always has leverage.

I have slo moed a few of his pass rushes and pointed out to a friend of mine, and also a Rams fans, how AD99 uses his hands so well, and often uses leverage off one blocker to change directions and blow past the other guy trying to block him

Watch his feet too @RhodyRams he moves better than most LB's.

This play happened with a ref standing right there and no flag.

The ref didn't have a view. That's why they need two guys back watching the OL instead of one. How the fuck can ONE guy monitor what essentially HALF of the players on the field are doing. It's just not possible.